1. Home
  2.  | 
  3. Alumni Awards
  4.  | Lifetime Achievement Awards

Alumni Awards

2024 Lifetime Achievement Award

We are pleased to announce the four recipients of the 2024 Lifetime Achievement Awards (LAA).

The Lifetime Achievement Award recognizes alumni for outstanding achievements in their professional lives, personal integrity and stature and service to the university. Established in 2001, LAA recipients are selected by a committee of Auburn administrators, trustees, faculty and alumni and is the highest award given by the association.

Lifetime Achievement Award Recipients

Lester Killebrew ’68
Emily ’64 and Gerald ’64 Leischuck
John Watson ’60
Carol ’86 and Gary ’86 Godfrey

2024 Lifetime Achievement Award Recipients standing together in front of flowers and LAA sign.

(L-R): Auburn University President Christopher B. Roberts, Auburn Alumni Association Board of Directors President LuAnne L. Hart ’80, Parker Duffey ’06, John H. Watson ’60, Lester Howard Killebrew Sr. ’68, Carol Elsen Godfrey ’86, Gary R. Godfrey ’86, Gerald S. Leischuck ’64 and Chief Engagement Officer and Auburn Alumni Association Director Kurt Sasser ’11.

2025 Lifetime and Young Alumni Achievement Award Nominations

2024 Award Recipients

Lester Killebrew '68

Lester Killebrew '68

Lester Howard Killebrew Sr. ’68 began farm-equipment business SunSouth LLC in 1969 with a bank loan, two employees and a high school trainee. Since then it’s become one of the largest John Deere dealers in the country, employing 500 people in 21 locations across the Southeast.

Read more about Lester
When the agriculture industry suffered a downturn during the recession of the early 1980s, he launched CCS Technology Centers, a computer hardware and software provider that helped agricultural producers stay competitive and profitable.

Through CCS, Killebrew would bring the first IBM personal computers to Alabama companies, universities and banks. He was instrumental in helping Auburn Football Coach Pat Dye computerize the Auburn Athletics Department. The company continues to thrive today, providing computer hardware and software to businesses and educational institutions.

He is current chairman of the board at SunSouth LLC, president and CEO of CCS Technology Centers, the head of Henry Farm Center, Inc. and holds the top position of the ATTA Library of STEM and History.

In recent years, Killebrew has helped fund some of Auburn’s newest landmarks like Neville Arena, the Gogue Performing Arts Center and the Rane Culinary Arts Center, and contributed to the reconstruction of the College of Agriculture’s home in Comer Hall.

The Abbeville, Ala. native served on the Auburn Law Society, was a member of the Alpha Pi Mu Engineering Honorary Society and started several scholarships in the Killebrew family name.

As a former member of the Auburn Alumni Association Board of Directors, Killebrew helped start the Lifetime Achievement Award Program in 2001. Now in 2024, he has the unique honor of receiving one.

Emily '64 and Gerald '64 Leischuck

Emily '64 and Gerald '64 Leischuck

Gerald S. Leischuck ’64 and the late Emily Reaves Leischuck ’64 of Auburn, Ala., first crossed paths on Auburn’s campus in 1963 while pursuing graduate degrees in the College of Education. Their shared dedication to Auburn’s educational mission is evident in their combined 51 years of dedicated service to Auburn as well as their generous philanthropic activities.

Read more about Emily and Gerald
Gerald began his Auburn career as a research associate in the Office of Institutional Research in 1964. He later joined the Office of Planning and Analysis and to serve as executive assistant to the president and secretary of the Board of Trustees.

He was recognized as the College of Education’s 1988 Distinguished Alumnus, and in 2000 he received the Doctor of Humane Letters, Honoris Causa, his second doctorate degree from Auburn.

Emily taught and held counseling positions at Auburn-area public schools before returning to Auburn University in 1974 as a panhellenic advisor in the Office of the Dean of Women. She later spent 13 years in the office of the president, serving as assistant to the president and board of trustees. In 1988, Auburn named a campus residence hall at the Hill in her honor.

A dedicated servant leader as well, Emily was active in numerous civic and community activities, but none as dear to her as the Lee County Humane Society, where she served on the board of directors for more than a decade.

After they retired, Gerald and Emily vowed to continue their support of higher education. As a memorial to their parents, they established the Leischuck-Reaves Endowment Fund for Scholarships — as well as the Gerald and Emily Leischuck Annual Teaching Awards Program in the College of Education — to bring not only great students to the Plains, but recognize great faculty as well.

Their generosity even extends beyond Auburn, as they have provided scholarship endowments at Birmingham-Southern College, Huntingdon College and the University of Northern Colorado.

While Emily unfortunately passed in 2013, the couple’s legacy lives on in the new students that enroll at Auburn, and other universities, every fall.

John Watson '60

John Watson '60

John H. Watson ’60 of Dothan, Ala. was the first person in his family to attend college, turning down a football scholarship to the University of Alabama for Auburn’s esteemed engineering program.

Read more about John
After graduating with a degree in mechanical engineering, he entered the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers as a second lieutenant and served on active duty during the Berlin Crisis of 1961.

When he returned to Dothan, he took a job at mechanical contractor and engineering company, Smith, Inc., and later was able to purchase the company with two other employees.

Possessing a great instinct for new opportunities, his business ventures included Engineered Systems, Inc., which specialized in major design-build projects like Auburn’s indoor football practice facility; Higgins Electric, Inc., an industrial supply business; and Aladan Inc., the largest latex glove producer in the U.S.

Watson was also a founding board member of the Alabama Institute for the Deaf and Blind (AIDB), helping double its financial endowment and contributing to the AIDB Wiregrass Center for disabled infants, children, adults and seniors. For his contributions, Watson was named the President’s Council Volunteer of the Year in 1996.

Throughout his life Watson has made incredible contributions to Auburn, establishing the John H. and Gail P. Watson Endowed Engineering Scholarship awarded to students from Dothan who are accepted into the Samuel Ginn College of Engineering. He was also instrumental in creating the John H. Watson Fieldhouse, Auburn’s first indoor practice facility, which now serves as the training center for most of Auburn’s 15 athletics teams.

He is a member of several esteemed Auburn support groups, including the Auburn Athletics Pat Dye Society, the 1856 Society and the Foy Society, and is a life member of the Auburn Alumni Association.

John’s outstanding professional contributions and selfless leadership led to his induction into the Dothan Business Hall of Fame, as well as the State of Alabama Engineering Hall of Fame and the State of Alabama Business Hall of Fame.

Carol '86 and Gary '86 Godfrey

Carol '86 and Gary '86 Godfrey

After meeting on campus as industrial engineering students, Gary R. Godfrey ’86 and Carol Elsen Godfrey ’86 would embark on a journey of shared passions, professional achievements and dedication to their alma mater.

Read more about Carol and Gary
Gary, a former Auburn Basketball player, spent two successful decades at Accenture as the global managing director of integrated planning and fulfillment. He did management consulting for some of the world’s premier brands, including Walmart, AT&T, Hewlett Packard and Heineken Breweries.

Carol was the senior vice president of products and markets for Southwire’s energy division, helping expand the company’s markets across North America and maintain its presence in the renewable energy industry. She previously served in leadership positions at Hubbell Inc., Alcan Aluminum Corp., Ralston Purina Company and Tampa Electric Company.

After Gary was diagnosed with ALS in 2019, the Godfreys became strong advocates for ALS awareness, raising millions of dollars in support for research. In 2023 Gary and former Alabama football player Kerry Goode, also diagnosed with ALS, raised thousands of dollars through their Iron Bowl Challenge.

In addition to caring for Gary and advocating for ALS research, Carol is a founding member of the 100+ Women Strong engineering program and has been instrumental in the advancement and recruitment of female engineering students to the Samuel Ginn College of Engineering.

The Godfreys have made significant philanthropic contributions to Auburn, supporting endowments and scholarships as well as the construction of the Thomas Walter Center for Technology Management and the Brown-Kopel Engineering Student Achievement Center.

In times easy or difficult, Gary and Carol have embodied their motto “make today your best day,” and have been an inspiration to the Auburn Family and others around the world.

View 2024 Lifetime Achievement Awards Photo Album

2023 Past Award Recipients

Bill Barrick-circle headshot for LAA

Michael B. McCartney ’57

Jere Beasley -circle headshot for LAA

J. Thomas Walter ’55

JoeForehand-circle headshot for LAA

Bobby Lowder ’64

Octavia-circle headshot for LAA

Charles D. McCrary ’73

2022 Past Award Recipients

Anita Newcomb standing with ski poles in front of snowy mountain

Ms. Anita Gentle Newcomb ‘76

Independent director
Luther Burbank Corporation

Bill McNair sitting on bench in park

Mr. William “Bill” R. McNair ‘68

Vice President of Network Operations (retired), Bellsouth
Partner, MCN Investments, LLC

Major James Hoskins walking in park

Major James “Jim” M. Hoskins ‘81

Chairman and CEO (retired)
Scitor Corporation

Jim Bullington sitting in his office in wheelchair

Diplomat James R. Bullington ‘62

Retired Diplomat, Former Ambassador to Burundi

2021 Past Award Recipients

Bill Barrick-circle headshot for LAA

Allen Reed ’70

RETIRED CHAIRMAN, PRESIDENT & CEO GM ASSET MANAGEMENT COMPANY
Auburn University Bachelor of Science
Aviation Management

Jere Beasley -circle headshot for LAA

Brooks Moore ’48

RETIRED PRESIDENT CONTROL DYNAMICS
Auburn University Bachelor of Science
Electrical Engineering

JoeForehand-circle headshot for LAA

Raymond Elliott Loyd ’61

CHAIRMAN EMERITUS DERBY FABRICATING
Auburn University Bachelor of Science
Mechanical Engineering

Octavia-circle headshot for LAA

Cecil Stanford Harrell ’58

RETIRED FOUNDER PHARMACY MANAGEMENT SERVICES, INC.
Auburn University Bachelor of Science
Pharmaceutical Science

2020 Past Award Recipients

Bill Barrick-circle headshot for LAA

William E. Barrick ’68

William E. Barrick ’68 was a first lieutenant in the Army, earning a Bronze Star for Meritorious Service in Vietnam.

Jere Beasley -circle headshot for LAA

Jere Locke Beasley, Sr. ’59

Jere Locke Beasley, Sr. ’59 is the founding member of Beasley Allen Law Firm and has practiced law as an advocate for victims of wrongdoing since 1962.

JoeForehand-circle headshot for LAA

Joe W. Forehand, Jr. ’71

Joe W. Forehand, Jr. ’71 served as chairman and CEO of Accenture, where he led the company through a split and a major global rebranding campaign.

Octavia-circle headshot for LAA

Octavia Spencer ’94

Octavia Spencer ’94 had her breakthrough when she starred as Minny Jackson in the period film “The Help”.